The six settlements for malfeasance in House offices totaled $359,450.

Details of the settlements emerged Friday after Congress’s Office of Compliance answered demands for information from the Committee on House Administration, part of an extensive review of sexual harassment and discrimination in congressional offices. The sexual harassment and indiscretion scandals that had already ensnared Senator Al Franken, Democrat of Minnesota, Representative John Conyers Jr., Democrat of Michigan, and Representative Joe Barton, Republican of Texas, pulled in two more lawmakers, Mr. Farenthold and Representative Ruben Kihuen, Democrat of Nevada.

“In light of these upsetting allegations, Congressman Kihuen should resign,” Representative Nancy Pelosi of California, the Democratic leader, said in a statement early Saturday.

Mr. Farenthold’s was the only sexual harassment case settled by the office since 2013, according to Office of Compliance data. In 2014, the congressman’s former communications director, Lauren Greene, accused him of regularly making comments to gauge her interest in a sexual relationship, including saying he was having “sexual fantasies” about her.

Mr. Farenthold’s statement Friday is sure to spark new calls to pass bipartisan legislation that would release the parties to Office of Compliance settlements from the mandatory nondisclosure agreements that come with them.

“While I 100 percent support more transparency with respect to claims against members of Congress, I can neither confirm nor deny that settlement involved my office as the Congressional Accountability Act prohibits me from answering that question,” Mr. Farenthold said.

Details of Mr. Farenthold’s relationship with Ms. Greene have been known for several years after Ms. Greene sued the lawmaker in 2014 alleging he had illegally fired her after she complained about mistreatment. Ms. Greene accused Mr. Farenthold and his chief of staff, Bob Haueter, of retaliating after she complained about a hostile work environment.

Besides harassment, Ms. Greene’s suit accused Mr. Farenthold of drinking “to excess” on numerous occasions and said that staff members who accompanied him to Capitol Hill functions were put on “redhead patrol” to keep him out of trouble.

Mr. Farenthold on Friday reissued a statement released by his office during the lawsuit that said the agreement between the two parties included “strict confidentiality.”

“Defendant disagrees strongly with the Plaintiff’s allegations in the Complaint, and Congressman Farenthold adamantly denies that he engaged in any wrongdoing. Plaintiff similarly disagrees with the Defendant’s allegations in the Answer,” the statement said. “However, after it became clear that further litigating this case would come at great expense to all involved — including the taxpayers — the parties engaged in mediation with a court-appointed mediator.”

The same year Ms. Greene sued him, Mr. Farenthold announced that he would give up a sexually explicit domain name — blow-me.org — that he had held since 1999, when he was in the business of buying such names on speculation and selling them.

The Office of Compliance said it has paid six settlements since 2013. The other cases include settlements for $150,000 for alleged veteran status discrimination, $76,000 for age discrimination, $37,250 for alleged disability discrimination, $7,000 for alleged discrimination because of sex and religion, and $5,200 for alleged discrimination claims because of race, national origin, and military service.

The office told the House Administration Committee that it is working to get information on cases settled before 2013.

A version of this article appears in print on , on Page A16 of the New York edition with the headline: Settlement of $84,000 For Legislator’s Accuser. Order Reprints | Today’s Paper | Subscribe